Feds unveil cleanup plan for nuclear waste dump

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — Shipments of plutonium-contaminated waste to the federal government's troubled nuclear dump site in southeastern New Mexico may resume as early as 2016, the U.S. Department of Energy said in announcing that the agency is committed to cleaning up the facility after a shutdown in February.

A recovery plan developed by the department over several months with help from nuclear industry experts details what needs to be done to decontaminate the underground Waste Isolation Pilot Plant after a truck fire and an unrelated release of radiation contaminated 22 workers and forced the site's closure.

Mark Whitney, acting assistant secretary for the Department of Energy's Office of Environmental Management, said Tuesday that officials estimate that 90 percent or more of the nuclear waste dump is free of radiological contamination. But the ventilation system will need to be improved and a new exhaust shaft constructed before full operations can resume, Whitney said. That could take as long as three years and as much as an additional $309 million.

"Once we understand the extent of the contamination, we'll have a better idea of what our approach to decontaminate will be," he said. "But the report makes clear that the approach we're looking at right now is not to remove the contamination, but to fix the contamination in place."

One approach will involve spraying water on the half-mile-deep salt walls in which the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant was built. The water will create a crust that will essentially encapsulate the contamination. In areas that might see heavy traffic or the use of large equipment, a type of fixative would be used instead of water.

The department acknowledged Tuesday that investigators have yet to pinpoint what caused the barrel of waste from the Los Alamos National Laboratory to breach Feb. 14 in one of the storage rooms at the nuclear dump. One theory has focused on a chemical reaction in highly acidic waste that was packed with a lead glove and organic cat litter to absorb moisture.

Investigators aren't expected to issue a final report on the cause until the end of the year.

Initial investigations into both accidents have blamed a slow erosion of safety culture at the site, something Whitney said the recovery plan aims to address.

Watchdog Don Hancock said the plan fails to establish safety standards for the public and for workers as recovery continues. He also questioned the costs of the cleanup and the timeline, given that any regulatory changes would require a public process.

"If there is a serious public and technical discussion about the plan, it's going to be clear it's not a plan that anybody in the public, or the regulators, or Congress, or anybody else should have confidence in," Hancock said.

Getting the nuclear dump back on track has been a top priority for the department given that the plant is the government's only permanent repository for waste such as contaminated gloves, tools and clothing from decades of building nuclear bombs.

However, Whitney told reporters that the work to reopen will not be rushed. "We're not going to be driven by artificial deadlines to resume operations," he said.

The focus, he said, is preparing the nuclear dump to take in the 144 containers of waste that have been stored above-ground at the site since the closure. Then shipments from other sites will be prioritized.

State and federal environmental regulators would have to sign off before operations resume.

Jim Winchester, a spokesman for the New Mexico Environment Department, said it's too early to comment on the substance of the Department of Energy's recovery plan. The state agency's technical staff will review the document, he said.